Graphics-Monthly
Graphics-Daily
Digital Data
Luigi Ciattaglia and Claudio Rafanelli
CNR-IFA area ricerca Tor Vergata
00133 Rome, Italy
Horacio Rodriguez and Jorge Araujo
DNA-IAA Cerrito 1248
1010 Buenos Aires, Argentina
The Italian PNRA (National Research Program in Antarctica) began continuous atmospheric carbon dioxide measurements at Jubany in 1994. The laboratory at Jubany Station is operated year-round by the DNA (Argentine Antarctic Department) through an agreement with PNRA. The Antarctic station at Jubany (62° 14'S, 58° 40'W) is situated on King George Island, in the South Shetland archipelago north of the Antarctic Penisula. The laboratory is situated at an elevation of 15 m.s.l. on the SE slope of Potter Bay. The bay, which has a maximum width around 1 km, is surrounded by permanent glaciers except the sector where the base lies. In some years the sea stretch of the bay freezes for 2-3 months.
March 1994 - December 2007
On the basis of annual averages calculated from monthly averages,
CO2 levels at Jubany have risen from 356.75
in 1994 to 381.05 in 2007. The reduced and poorly defined concentration peak of
1997-1998 was also observed at other Antarctic stations in the WMO Global
Atmospheric Watch network, and may have been caused by any one or a combination
of several things, including sea surface temperature anomalies, air
temperature anomalies, and changes in general atmospheric circulation.
Among all the factors affecting the atmospheric
CO2 concentration the most convincing cause
seems related to the 1997-1998 El Niño and subsequent La Niña episodes. That
hypothesis is based on the behavior of SOI and CO2
concentrations at several Antarctic and non-Antarctic sites and from cross
correlations between the two parameters.
CITE AS: Ciattaglia, L., C. Rafanelli, H. Rodriguez, and J. Araujo.
2007. Atmospheric CO2 record from continuous
measurements at Jubany Station, Antarctica, in Trends Online: A Compendium
of Data on Global Change, Carbon Dioxide Information Analysis Center, Oak Ridge
National Laboratory, U.S. Department of Energy, Oak Ridge, Tenn., U.S.A.
February 2008
Jubany Station
Antarctica
62°14' S, 58°40' W
15 m right MSL Period of Record
Methods
The measuring system is based on a Siemens U5 NDIR analyzer equipped with a serial
interface controlled by software running on a PC. Atmospheric water vapor and
humidity contained in the cylinders are removed by passing air for approximately
one minute through a U glass tube placed in a cryogenic trap (-70°C). The
air intake is located on a 10m-high mast situated 40m away from the laboratory
building. The Jubany Laboratory has now at its disposal a set of 6
CO2-in-air stations whose concentration, versus the
World Meteorological Organizations's standard scale, was determined at the
United States' National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration's Global
Monitoring Division of the Earth System Research Laboratory. The analyzer scale is
automatically recalibrated every 3 hours by using two working standards (zero and span)
which differ by 20-25 ppm. The accuracy achieved in the calibration phase and in
the atmospheric CO2 measurement permits reporting to +0.1 ppm.
Trends
References